Good
Morning All,
John 20:19; “On the evening
of that day, the first day of the week, the doors being locked where the
disciples were for fear of the Jews, Jesus came and stood among them and said
to them, “Peace be with you.”
The hardest part is the waiting.
I have sat with families while they wait for a loved one who is
surgery. Even the most routine, commonplace
surgery is still surgery. It is the
intrusion into the human body with foreign objects and chemicals. It is controlled, planned, and in a clean
environment but it is still placing the human body in an undesired
condition. Even with the most common, it
seems that all anyone remembers is those words from the surgeon, “there is
always a chance that something can go wrong.”
When our youngest son was only about six months old, he had a same day
surgery procedure. It was routine
surgery; yet, as we handed our new son to the sweet and kind nurse; she morphed
into Nurse Ratched (in my mind) and the wait was on and it was one of the
longest waits that I have ever experienced.
One of the more difficult events during the wait is the telephone
call. Often, during the procedure, a nurse
from the operating room will call to the waiting room to inform the family what
is going on during the procedure. Many
families struggle with “the phone call”; it is not uncommon for the family to
ask me to do the phone call; they are not comfortable with it. When there are more than one family waiting,
you can see a fidgety jump when the phone rings and the nurse at the station
calls out a name to be spoken to.
Cognitively, you know they would never call and tell you something went
horribly wrong yet emotionally; it is hard to suppress that thought.
If you have ever experienced that kind of wait; a wait that involved a
period of uncertainty about a loved one; you have had a taste of what the
disciples went through on Saturday. The
one whom they loved with all they had, their teacher, spiritual leader, friend,
confidante, the one whom they thought was the Messiah, was lying in a tomb,
killed in the most horrific and humiliating fashion. Everything had gone completely wrong and they
knew not what to do. They were lost,
like those sheep that Jesus often spoke of.
You can imagine that, if they would have had clocks, each second would
have ticked off slowly and loudly.
So, when Jesus appeared to them, the first thing he offered them was
peace. He was offering a quiet and
confident heart and a content spirit.
His appearance, though not fully grasped yet, meant that everything,
from that point forward, was going to be different. It was different for them, for the people
they taught and it is different for you and me as well. It was certainly worth the wait!
Lord
Jesus, your rest in the tomb has sanctified the tombs of those faithfully
departed. As we wait for your promised
return, we celebrate the newness of life that you give us. We celebrate the peace that we have and the certainty
of life everlasting with you. In your
blessed name we pray, amen.
God’s Peace,
Pastor Bret
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